Public interest swamps the website for oldest known Bible
Amid much publicity, the Codex Sinaiticus, a fourth century treasure, was presented to the world at large today. The result, the website created for the book was unable to cope with the number of visitors. By evening time, over 100,000 people had sought to access this treasure in its online format with the result that the website was unable to handle the sheer volume of visitors.
Codex Sinaiticus is considered the oldest complete Bible known to us at present. Although it does not now have all of its original pages, it is considered that the codex did contain all books of the Bible.
In a project spearheaded by the British Library, which holds much of the codex, and the University of Birmingham, the remaining parts of the codex were brought together and digitized for publishing together with a digital transcription on the internet. The other remaining sections of the codex are held at St. Catherine's Monastery, in Sinai, the Leipzig University Library, Germany and National Library of Russia. This is the first time the codex has been this complete since Constantine Tischendorf was able to take parts from the monastery on Mt. Sinai in the mid 19th century.
The website is available in the languages of the four holders of the parts of the codex. St. Catherine's Monastery is represented in the Greek language, not Arabic, as it is a Greek Orthodox monastery.
Presently pages from the holdings of the British Library and Leipzig University Library are available for viewing – if you are able to visit when the web site is operational. Additional pages will be made available on the website in November 2008 with completion of the site scheduled for July 2009.
The discovery and publication of an unprovenanced Hebrew document, purportedly from the 1st century BCE and written on stone, has generated some interesting comments about the origins of Christianity and its relationship to Judaism. I'll write more on this in future but in the interim, I'd like to draw attention to one writer in particular.
James Carroll, writing in the Boston Globe, concludes his article on the 'Gabriel Revelation' with the following comment:
That Christianity defined itself as the polar opposite of Judaism was an accident of history, with lethal consequences. The two religions are and will remain distinct, but it is urgently important that Christians, especially, correct the mistake that saw Jesus in radical opposition to his own people. He remained a devoted Jew to the end, and his first followers understood him, after his death, in fully Jewish terms. If Christians had continued to do so, the tradition of anti-Judaism, which spawned anti-Semitism, would not have developed.
James has summed up the situation appropriately, although we should always appreciate that anti-Semitism predates the time of Jesus Christ.
In the first four centuries of the Christian era, the face of Christianity slowly changed as the church sought to create for itself an identity separate from its Jewish roots. The implications of this metamorphosis are profound.